<div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654340367" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1–4</span>
        This episode closely follows the third canto of <span class="commentaryI">Orlando Furioso</span>, where Bradamante
            receives a vision of her progeny. Ariosto’s Merlin is no more than a voice from the
            tomb; the genealogy of the house of Este is revealed by the sorceress Melissa in a
            procession of spirits like that which Virgil’s Anchises shows Aeneas (<span class="commentaryI">Aen</span>
            6.703-892).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654349932" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 1</p>
        <p class="">Cf. <span class="commentaryI">Am</span> 8.1-2, ‘full of the living fire, / Kindled above unto the maker neere’. The
            theory of love as a flame from heaven, kindling desire for the ‘true beautie’ of virtue
            which inspires lovers to noble action, is woven at large through Spenser’s <span class="commentaryI">Fowre
                Hymnes</span> and is the most basic allegorical significance of Arthur’s quest for
            Gloriana. In principle it explains the relation between the poem’s ‘fierce warres and
            faithfull loves’ (I.pr.1.9). The difficulty of perfectly separating this love from ‘base
            affections’ is also represented in both works, most recently in <span class="commentaryI">FQ</span> by the
            ambiguity of Arthur’s and Guyon’s motives in pursuing Florimell and by the horror
            Britomart experiences on first discovering sexual passion within herself.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654374642" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">lamping</span>: Coined by Spenser, possibly from Ital <span class="commentaryI">lampante</span>
            clear.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654388092" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">which men call</span>: Emphasizes the act of naming as human, in
            contrast to the divine origins of the fire, in preparation for the second half of the
            stanza, which insists upon the distinction because ‘men’ tend to apply the name of love
            to both kinds of flame (as the narrator himself will do at v.1).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654403811" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">1.7–1.8</span>
        The parallel in these lines between ‘true beautie’ and ‘vertue’ may insinuate rivalry as
            well as identity.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654413054" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 2</p>
        <p class="">Here Spenser presents love as a force mediating between fate and chance, ensuring that
            ‘The fatall purpose of divine foresight’ will play itself out in the seemingly chaotic
            course of human events. For moments at which Spenser plays on the interpolation of fate
            within chance, see I.ix.6.6-7.7; II.ix.59.5, 60.1.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654424042" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2.1</span>
        
            <span class="">2.1 Cf.
                Plato, <span class="commentaryI">Symposium</span> 178a: ‘First then, as I said, he told me that the speech of
                Phaedrus began with points of this sort—that Love was a great god, among men and
                gods a marvel; and this appeared in many ways, but notably in his birth’.</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654445150" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">2.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">fatall</span>: Cf. I.ix.7.1, where Arthur wonders whether the
            almighty sent him to Faeryland through ‘fatal deepe foresight’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654472669" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">3.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">triumph</span>: Echoing the title of Petrarch’s <span class="commentaryI">Trionfi</span>, of
            which the first is the <span class="commentaryI">Triumphus Amoris</span>. The six triumphs are visionary poems
            that adapt the trappings of the ancient Roman military procession to celebrate the
            successive victories of Love, Chastity, Death, Fame, Time, and Eternity. They were
            influential in establishing the image of a militant Cupid that is pervasive in
            Renaissance European literature.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654510901" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">3.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">matrimoniall bowre</span>: The dynastic goal of the narrative must
            replace the Bower of Bliss with its sanctioned counterpart.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654541067" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.2</span>
        
            <span class="">4.2 The
                more usual genealogy for the Muses holds them to be the daughters of Jupiter and the
                Titaness Mnemosyne (memory), a parentage Spenser affirms in <span class="commentaryI">SC</span>
                <span class="commentaryI">June</span> 66, <span class="commentaryI">Time</span> 336, and <span class="commentaryI">FQ </span>IV.xi.10.1-2. Both lineages were
                reported, however: Conti, who opens his chapter on the Muses by quoting Orpheus and
                Hesiod on their descent from Jupiter (<span class="commentaryI">Myth</span> 7.15), mentions in his chapter on
                Apollo that ‘the ancients thought he was [the Muses’] father and leader’ (4.10;
                288). Spenser more often follows this genealogy (<span class="commentaryI">Teares</span> 2, 57; <span class="commentaryI">FQ</span>
                II.x.3; <span class="commentaryI">Epith</span> 121;<span class="commentaryI"> </span>E.K.<span class="commentaryI"> </span>gloss to <span class="commentaryI">SC</span>
                <span class="commentaryI">Apr</span> 41).</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654553896" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.4</span>
        
            <span class="">4.4
                According to late medieval tradition, the ‘Nine Worthies’ consisted of three
                subgroups: the pagan worthies Hector, Alexander the Great, and Julius Caesar; the
                Jewish worthies Joshua, David, and Judas Maccabeus; and the Christian worthies
                Arthur, Charlemagne, and Godfrey of Bouillon.</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654562892" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.5</span>
        
            <span class="">4.5 At
                I.pr.2.3-4, the poet asks an unnamed muse, ‘chiefe of nyne’, to ‘Lay forth out of
                thine everlasting scryne / The antique rolles’ that tell of Arthur’s quest for
                Gloriana. At II.ix.56.6 Eumnestes (an alternative figure for memory) lays up the
                records of human events ‘in his immortall scrine’. The Muse’s ‘great volume of
                Eternitye’ is another figure for this mythic archive.</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654580844" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Clio</span>: The muse of history. In previous invocations (I.pr.2;
            I.xi.6; II.x.3) Spenser has not named the muse he invokes, who may be Calliope, the muse
            of epic poetry (see gloss to <span class="commentaryI">SC</span>
            <span class="commentaryI">Apr</span> 100). Spenser distinguishes the ‘Methode of the Poet historical’ from that of
            the ‘Historiographer’ in <span class="commentaryI">FQ</span>Letter45-52, but since <span class="commentaryI">FQ</span> contains three
            substantial and continuous passages of chronicle material (including the lineage
            foretold by Merlin in the present canto) that are, nevertheless, broken apart and
            disposed within the narrative out of chronological sequence, it remains unclear whether
            he is combining the muses of history and epic or distinguishing their functions. (On the
            disposition of the chronicle materials, see Mills 1976.)
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654625132" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">4.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">protense (<span class="commentaryI">pretense</span> 1596, 1609)</span>: <span class="commentaryI">OED</span> cites 1590
            as the only known instance of ‘protense’ as a noun for ‘protension’. The later reading
            relies on the sense, ‘An assertion of a right, title, etc.; the putting forth of a
            claim’ (<span class="commentaryI">OED</span>).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654654827" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">5.4–5.5</span>
        5.4-5 Similar expressions are found at I.vii.40.7-8 and II.i.44.2-3.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654668079" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">5.6–5.9</span>
        5.6-9 See ii.52.7-8; after the opening invocation, the narrative is resuming where it
            left off.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654713804" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">6.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">straungely . . . straunge</span>: The repetition suggests that
            through the act of looking, Britomart has assumed some of the foreignness of the image
            that invades her.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654732107" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">6.7–6.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">the Africk Ismael, / <span class="commentaryI">Or th’Indian</span> Peru</span>: Occupants of
            northern Africa were thought to be descended from Ishmael; India and America were
            imagined to be the same place. Both represent the farthest reaches of the known world.
            At II.pr.2.6 ‘th’Indian <span class="commentaryI">Peru</span>’ appears as a precedent for Faeryland, where
            Britomart will eventually find Artegall; at II.x.72.5-6 the empire of Faeryland is said
            to include ‘all <span class="commentaryI">India</span> . . . / And all that now <span class="commentaryI">America</span> men call’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654747637" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">7.1</span>
        See 6.3n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654770996" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">7.3–7.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Maridunum . . . Cayr-Merdin</span>: The modern Welsh town of
            Carmarthen, named ‘Maridunum’ in Ptolemy’s <span class="commentaryI">Geographiae</span> (1511: B2) and
            ‘Kaermerdin’ in Geoffrey of Monmouth (<span class="commentaryI">Historia </span>136). Geoffrey reports that
            Vortigern first discovered the young Merlin in Kaermerdin, while Holinshed dismisses the
            Merlin stories as ‘not of such credit as deserveth to be registered in anie sound
            historie’ (<span class="commentaryI">Chronicles</span> 1.564).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654785427" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">7.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">(they say)</span>: Repeated at 8.3; followed by ‘some say’ (10.1) and
            ‘men say’ (13.1), signaling that what follows is more folktale than historical record,
            as Holinshed indicates (7.3-4n; see also st. 8-9n). The comic tone of the narrator’s
            warnings against the danger of being devoured by fiends or of having one’s ‘feeble
            braines’ stunned by the underground rumbling of their chains (8.7-9; 9.1-5) likewise
            signals the tongue-in-cheek status of the passage’s claim to truth.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654816625" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">7.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">delue</span>: Merlin’s ‘delve’ corresponds to the <span class="commentaryI">grotta</span> in
            Ariosto (<span class="commentaryI">OF</span> 3.10.1)
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654833925" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">8.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 8-9</p>
        <p class="">In these stanzas Spenser plays with a distinction from the rhetorical tradition between
            factual and fictional descriptions. Thus Peacham (1577), for example, distinguishes
            between <span class="commentaryI">Topographia</span>, ‘an evident and true description of a place’ (P1), and
                <span class="commentaryI">Topothesia</span>, ‘a fayned description of a place, that is, when we describe a
            place, and yet no such place’ (P1v).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654847657" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">8.4–8.6</span>
        8.4-6 On Spenser’s geographical confusion in these lines see Osgood (<span class="commentaryI">Var</span>
            3.224-25). The river Barry is more than fifty miles from the hills of Dynevor.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654867476" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">8.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">cruell Feendes</span>: Merlin is associated in medieval romance with
            diabolical spirits, one of whom supposedly fathered him (cf. 13.1-5). So in Malory, for
            example, one knight warns another, ‘Beware . . . of Merlion, for he knowith all thinges
            by the devylles craffte’ (<span class="commentaryI">Morte</span> 3.18-19). Spenser mentions Merlin’s ‘sprights’ at
            7.9, and they figure prominently in the legend of his demise (st. 10-12). In Ariosto,
            Bradamante’s offspring appear explicitly as a procession of such spirits (see arg.n).
            Spenser, by contrast, isolates his references to sprights and demons within stanzas
            7-13, where they are rhetorically ‘flagged’ as popular superstition. When Britomart and
            Glauce arrive on the scene in st. 14, Merlin appears to be alone; and although he seems
            at one point in the genealogy to point at a spectacle (‘Behold the man’, 32.1), the
            absence of other signals implies that this is rather a moment of heightened rhetorical
            vividness than a reference to anything literally visible in the cave. (So too at 21.5
            Merlin, beginning to speak after a brief silence, is said to ‘foorth display’ ‘his
            spirite’.) Ariosto’s explicitly demonic procession reflects a tradition in Virgilian
            commentary that rationalizes Aeneas’s descent to the underworld as the product of demons
            and witchcraft (Wilson-Okamura 2010: 157-63).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654888972" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">10.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 10-11.2</p>
        <p class="">Cf. Malory 4.1-2, where the object of Merlin’s dotage is not the Lady of the Lake
            herself, but one of her damsels ‘that hight Nenyve’.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654931223" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">11.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">traine</span>: In Malory she tricks him into entering a tunnel under
            a rock, and traps him there.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654951716" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">12.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 12-13</p>
        <p class="">Cf. the description of Fidelia’s power ‘when she list poure out her larger spright’ at
            I.x.20. Like the subtle distancing of Merlin from his medieval reputation as half-demon,
            the strong resemblance between st. 12 and that earlier account casts Merlin as an agent
            of divine providence. Through such indirect means Spenser hints at a conversion
            narrative similar to the story of Merlin’s birth as given (for example) in the Old
            French <span class="commentaryI">Merlin</span>, where the magician is sired upon a young nun by a demon acting as
            an incubus. The council of devils intends for this parody of the Annunciation to produce
            an antichrist, but Merlin is sanctified in the womb by his mother’s prayers and
            repentance, and after birth by the sacrament of baptism. Spenser’s Merlin remains a more
            ambiguous figure, claiming to speak for providence without having entirely severed his
            connection to diabolical origins—related, not coincidentally, in st. 13 immediately
            following the description that links him to Fidelia.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654962591" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">12.1–12.2</span>
        12.1-2 Cf. Virgil, <span class="commentaryI">Ecl</span> 8.69, <span class="commentaryI">carmina vel caelo possunt deducere lunam</span>
            (‘Songs can even draw the moon down from heaven’).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408654978442" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">12.5–12.7</span>
        12.5-7 Cf. the powers ascribed to Arthur’s uncovered shield at I.vii.34-35.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655015975" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.1–13.5</span>
        
            <span class="">13.1-5
                Spenser takes the story from Geoffrey<span class="commentaryI">, Historia</span> 136-38. It offers a distorted
                analogy to Britomart’s predicament, one that is emphasized by the simile at
                ii.11.6-9, with its proleptic identification of the image she bears in her
                imagination and the ‘babe’ to which she will give birth.</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655040224" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.5–13.6</span>
        13.5-6 These names, invented by Spenser, appear to contain further humorous references to
            Britomart: Matilda comes from the Ger <span class="commentaryI">Mahthild</span> battle-maid, while <span class="commentaryI">Pubidius</span>
            seems to be jestingly derived from L <span class="commentaryI">pubes</span> signs of puberty.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655051891" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">a faire Lady Nonne</span>: Punning on ‘lady none’, in keeping with
            the playful tone of the passage.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655072498" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.7</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Mathraual</span>: ‘Matrafal’ in Camden, <span class="commentaryI">Brit</span> 1586, where it is identified as <span class="commentaryI">Principum
                Powisiae Regia sedes</span>, the royal seat of the medieval Welsh and British kingdom
            of Powys (383).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655096242" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">13.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">king Ambrosius</span>: Son of Constantius, grandson of Constantine,
            and brother to Uther Pendragon, whose reign succeeded his (see II.x.67).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655131894" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">14.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">with loue to frend</span>: Echoing I.i.28.7, ‘(with God to
            frend)’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655178248" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">14.8–14.9</span>
        14.8-9 See 7.1 and 6.3n for ‘straunge’; Merlin’s ‘characters’ are stranger for the
            wrenching of accent that places metrical stress on the second syllable. Merlin’s writing
            in the earth sustains the calculated ambivalence with which Spenser presents him, for it
            echoes both godly and diabolical precedents. At John 8:6, 8, Jesus writes on the ground
            with his finger when challenging the scribes and Pharisees who accuse the woman taken in
            adultery; in Tasso’s <span class="commentaryI">GL</span> 13.5-11, the Saracen magician Ismen ‘formed his circle
            and traced his symbols’ (<span class="commentaryI">suo cerchio formovvi e i segni impresse</span>; 5.9) to summon
            ‘spirits innumerable, infinite’ (<span class="commentaryI">innnumerabili, infiniti / spiriti</span>; 10.1-2) to
            enchant the forest that supplies the armies of Godfrey with timber for the siege of
            Sion. The description of Merlin also echoes that of Archimago calling up ‘Legions of
            Sprights’ at I.i.36-38; this echo is reinforced by the link both passages share to
            Tasso’s Ismen, whose ‘dread syllables’ which ‘the tongue that is not irreligious cannot
            repeat’ (<span class="commentaryI">orribil note, / lingua, s’empia non è, ridir no pote;</span> 8.8-9) are closely
            recalled in Archimago’s ‘few words most horrible, / (Let none them read)’ at
            I.i.37.1-2.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655196472" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">15.8–15.9</span>
        15.8-9 Cf. st. 2n for Spenser’s tendency to equivocate about the degree to which events
            in the narrative are ‘fatall’ (governed by fate).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655207321" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">16.2–16.3</span>
        16.2-3 Glauce’s inflated and comically obscure periphrasis means that either three or
            nine months have passed, depending on how many of her three threes are simple
            repetitions for effect, and how many of them signal a reckoning of sums. Cf.
            I.viii.38.6-7, where Redcrosse’s similar formulation is equally ambiguous. At I.ix.15.9
            Arthur reports having sought Gloriana for nine months; at II.i.53.1-3, Amavia describes
            her gestation of Ruddymane as having taken up ‘thrise three’ lunar months; at
            II.ii.44.1-3, Guyon reports that his quest has been underway for three lunar months; and
            at II.ix.7.5-7 Arthur tells Guyon that his quest for Gloriana has been underway for
            seven solar years (1590; 1596, one year, which would correspond to the nine months he
            reported at I.ix.15.9 plus the three months Guyon’s quest has been underway). Given the
            nature of the destiny to be revealed by Merlin, the nine lunar months of gestation would
            be a symbolically appropriate span.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655220794" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">16.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">First rooting</span>: See ii.17.5n for the figure of the genealogical
            tree taking root in Britomart’s womb.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655259224" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">17.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">th’Enchaunter</span>: A title shared with Archimago (I.ii.arg.1) and
            Busirane (xii.31.1).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655553430" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">17.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">dissembled womanish guyle</span>: She dissembles with guile, and her
            guile is part of what she dissembles.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655603169" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">18.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">engraffed</span>: See 16.6 and ii.17.5n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655625407" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">18.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">infest</span>: See ii.32.4n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655644790" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">18.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">hollow brest</span>: Cf. the description of Merlin's mirror as
            ‘hollow shaped’ (ii.19.8).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655655052" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">18.9</span>
        Glauce’s language here echoes the reports of Merlin’s origin in st. 13.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655697230" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">19.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">hauing fate obayd</span>: Unlike Spenser’s narrator and other
            characters, Merlin does not equivocate about the role of fate in the narrative (cf.
            21.6, ‘by fatall lore’, and st. 2n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655793740" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">20.1–20.7</span>
        20.1-7 Britomart’s veilings and unveilings are consistently the subject of epic similes:
            cf. i.43; also IV.i.13.6-9 and vi.19.5-20. Elsewhere these similes describe the effects
            of her unveiled beauty on observers; here, the focus is on the shame Britomart feels
            when her sexual passion is revealed along with her identity. The conceit of Aurura’s
            blushing departure from the bed of Tithonus at dawn is Homeric and Virgilian; the story
            upon which it is based appears in the Homeric <span class="commentaryI">Hymn to Aphrodite</span>, 218-38.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655803889" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">20.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Carnation</span>: A term for the rosy-pink color of (Caucasian)
            flesh, from L <span class="commentaryI">carnem</span>; also a form of the flower-name <span class="commentaryI">coronation</span> (cf.
                <span class="commentaryI">SC</span>
            <span class="commentaryI">Apr</span> 138-9, ‘Bring Coronations, and Sops in wine, / worne of Paramoures’). These
            two meanings nicely compress into Britomart’s blush the sense that her royal or dynastic
            role will be to use her own body to enflesh an heir to the throne.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655841043" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">21.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">fatall lore</span>: See st. 2n and 19.7n. Merlin claims to speak on
            behalf of ‘the powres’ (19.9) that guide ‘eternall providence’ (24.4).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655852695" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.2–22.4</span>
        22.2-4 The fullest expression of the image introduced at ii.17.5-6 and recalled at
            iii.16.6 (‘rooting’) and 18.3 (‘engraffed’). Spenser’s image recalls Isa 11:1, ‘But
            there shal come a rod forthe of the stocke of Ishái, and a grafe shal growe out of his
            rootes’, a passage labeled in the Geneva text as a ‘Prophecie of Christ’. It also echoes
            Herodotus, <span class="commentaryI">Hist</span> 1.108, where Astyages ‘dreamed that a vine grew out of the
            genitals of this daughter, and that the vine covered the whole of Asia’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655871885" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">embodied braunches</span>: Medieval and early modern iconography of
            the ‘tree of Jesse’ showed a rooted trunk whose branches literally bore human bodies as
            their fruit.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655894273" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.4</span>
        Repeated from II.x.2.5.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655913881" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.5–22.9</span>
        Britomart’s Trojan ancestry is set forth at large in canto ix, st. 33-51.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655926005" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">22.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">the heuens brood</span>: Because the Trojan lineage extends back
            through Dardanus to Zeus and Electra (cf. Homer, <span class="commentaryI">Il</span> 20.213-40).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655936653" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">23.1</span>
        23.1 Duessa is ‘the sole daughter of an Emperour’ (I.ii.22.7) whereas Una is ‘the
            daughter of a king’ (i.48.5); the British struggle to throw off Roman rule pits ‘Briton
            kings’ against Roman emperors (II.x.49.9, 51.1). Britomart’s offspring includes both
            because after Henry VIII, Tudor England (like other early modern states) asserted its
            autonomy by claiming an imperial status derived from Constantine; hence the poem is
            dedicated to ‘The most mightie and magnificent Empresse Elizabeth’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655948405" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">23.8–23.9</span>
        23.8-9 Eliding the distinction between ‘forren foe’ and ‘civill jarre’, or enemy invasion
            and domestic broils, these lines recall the similar blurring that attends Artegall’s
            appearance in Merlin’s mirror. There Britomart’s future spouse appears in a mirror whose
            declared purpose is to reveal enemy invasions (ii.21.3-4), although it also shows ‘What
            ever . . . frend had faynd’ (19.5). Merlin’s mirror is associated with Ptolemy’s magic
            glass, shattered ‘when his love was false’ (20.9), and with the mirror in Chaucer, <span class="commentaryI">CT
                </span>Squire<span class="commentaryI"> </span>5.132-41, that reveals both adversities affecting the realm and
            treasons in love. See notes to canto ii, st. 18-21.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408655957811" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.1</span>
        
            <span class="">24.1 Cf.
                Malecasta’s wandering eye at i.41.5-8, i.50.6-7.</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656000544" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">streight</span>: Echoing Isa 40:3-4, ‘make streight in the desert a
            path for our God . . . and the croked shalbe made streight’, and Luke 3:4. 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656014476" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.1–24.6</span>
        
            <span class="">24.1-6 On
                the contrast between providence and the wandering or glancing of chance, see st.
                2n.</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656025356" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.6</span>
        24.6 Merlin directly answers Britomart’s claim that her fortune is ‘wicked’
            (ii.44.1).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656044233" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">prowest</span>: Echoing the praise of Arthur at II.viii.18.3 and
            xi.30.6.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656053712" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">his will</span>: In the repetition of ‘his will’ from 24.5, Merlin
            formulates the patriarchal demand for female submission to a masculine lord authorized
            by God.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656064161" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">24.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">doe . . . dew</span>: The internal rhyme enforces the imperative:
            perform that which is owed.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656076236" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.2–25.4</span>
        25.2-4 The metrical disposition of Glauce’s questions is precise. The first two lines
            each contain two questions, while the fifth and final question takes up two lines.
            Within each pair of lines, the position of the caesura shifts, following first the third
            foot and then the second, to make up a repeated chiasmic pattern (3/2 // 2/3). The first
            of the two line-breaks on which the repeated pattern turns is end-stopped, the second
            enjambed.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656102186" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">confirme</span>: Suggesting through rhyme that if ‘Indeede the fates
            are firme’, human endeavors are still needed to firm up their firmness.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656110748" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.9</span>
        
            <span class="">The
                careful balancing of terms in 24.1-5 (wandring/streight, glauncing/ guyded) is
                extended here as Merlin affirms the need for human striving to ‘guyde’ to their
                completion the causes that have ‘Guyded [Britomart’s] glaunce’ without her awareness
                or intention. As McCabe affirms, Britomart’s <span class="commentaryI">destiny</span> is not just the goal of
                her quest but the journey as well, and so she both guides and is guided (1989:
                186-87).</span>
        
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656142579" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">25.9</span>
        25.9 The careful balancing of terms in 24.1-5 (wandring/streight, glauncing/ guyded) is
            extended here as Merlin affirms the need for human striving to ‘guyde’ to their
            completion the causes that have ‘Guyded [Britomart’s] glaunce’ without her awareness or
            intention. As McCabe affirms, Britomart’s <span class="commentaryI">destiny</span> is not just the goal of her
            quest but the journey as well, and so she both guides and is guided (1989: 186-87).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656153236" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">26.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 26-50 </p>
        <p class="">These stanzas present the second of three installments into which Spenser divides the
            British chronicles. He begins in II.x with what is chronologically the second part,
            covering the reigns of British monarchs from the mythic eponymous founder Brut to the
            succession of Uther Pendragon, the father Arthur does not know (see notes to II.x.arg.1,
            st. 5-68, and 68.2-3). The second part now resumes with the reign of Artegall and
            Britomart, which has no direct source in the chronicles but occupies the genealogical
            space from which Arthur, wandering in Faeryland, has been displaced. The gap between
            Arthur and Artegall-Britomart is the space in which the poem’s ‘present’—a hybrid of
            Faery fiction and British chronicle history—unfolds (see st. 29n). The third part of the
            chronicles, circling back to link the origins of British history to the westward
            ‘translation of empire’ from Troy through Rome to England, is given in canto ix.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656184383" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">26.2</span>
        26.2 For Artegall’s name and role in the poem, see ii.arg.2n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656193648" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">26.4–26.9</span>
        26.4-9 This account of Artegall’s parentage resembles the history of Redcrosse (I.x.65).
            Arthur is likewise ignorant of his lineage (I.ix.3).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656203459" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">27.1</span>
	<span class="commentaryEmphasis">Gorlois</span>: Duke of Cornwall and husband to the Lady Igerne (see <span class="commentaryI">FQ </span>Letter 30,
                ‘<span class="commentaryI">the Lady Igrayne</span>’), by whom Uther Pendragon fathered Arthur. Geoffrey of
            Monmouth retails the legend according to which Merlin transformed Uther into the
            likeness of Gorlois to deceive Igerne (182-88). By implication, Spenser makes Artegall
            Arthur’s legitimate half-brother as well as his chronicle alter-ego.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656212602" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">27.2</span>
	<span class="commentaryEmphasis">Cador</span>: Mentioned in Geoffrey and in Holinshed as Duke (or Earl) of Cornwall and an ally
            to Arthur against the Saxons (<span class="commentaryI">Historia</span> 194, 200; <span class="commentaryI">Chronicles</span> 1.575).
            ‘Cador, king of Cornwall’ and ‘Arthgal of Kaergueir, now named Warwik’ are both
            mentioned in Geoffrey as attending Arthur’s Whitsun festival at Caerleon (208-10;
            Arthgal is not to be confused with Arthgallo, named ‘Archigald’ by Spenser at
            II.x.44.4). Hardyng mentions both Artegall and Cador as knights of the Round Table,
            identifying Cador as the ‘kynges brother. . . on the syster syde’ (1543: 17r-v).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656237632" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">28.3–28.5</span>
        28.3-5 Merlin portrays the dynastic marriage as a military alliance (for the sustained
            play on ‘in armes’, see i.45.7n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656259195" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">28.6–28.7</span>
        28.6-7 The parallelism in these lines (‘thee from them do call . . . him from thee take
            away’) pairs Britomart’s pregnancy with Artegall’s death (see 29.2n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656301683" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">28.8</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Too rathe</span>: Cf. <span class="commentaryI">SC</span>
            <span class="commentaryI">Dec</span> 98.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656327879" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">29.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 29 </p>
        <p class="">Artegall’s royal heir remains unnamed, in part no doubt to downplay his equivalence to
            the chronicles’ Conanus, who came to the throne by killing his uncle. (Spenser thus
            reverses the chronicle acccounts, which identify no father for Conanus.) Spenser may
            also have chosen not to name the heir because he represents the point at which faery
            fiction is grafted onto the chronicles. The resulting genealogy, never spelled out, is
            complex. It may be summarized as follows: the Lady Igrayne (Igerne) bears sons both to
            Gorlois and to Uther. To Gorlois she bears the brothers Artegall and Cador; to Uther,
            their half-brother Arthur. Arthur succeeds Uther to the throne but dies without heir.
            The chronicles report that Arthur is succeeded by Constantius (Constantine), the son of
            his half-brother Cador. Meanwhile, however, Spenser has created an alternative genealogy
            whereby Artegall (‘equal to Arthur’; see ii.arg.2n) and Britomart not only succeed King
            Ryence to the throne of South Wales (cf. ii.18.5n) but also take the place of Ryence’s
            brother-in-law, Arthur, in the succession of British rule. This silent and, as it were,
            figurative supplanting of Arthur is re-enacted explicitly when their son merges with the
            historical Conan to usurp the crown from his uncle Constantius, who succeeds Arthur to
            the throne in the chronicles.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656366466" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">29.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">his ymage dead</span>: The phrase also suggests ‘his dead image’ and
            ‘the image of him in death’, and echoes Glauce’s question to Britomart about the first
            effect Artegall’s image has on her: what has ‘living made thee dead’ (ii.30.9)? This
            compressed and ambiguous phrasing is found in two other places in Spenser, both
            suggesting that the poem itself will function as heir to (image of) the childless
            Elizabeth (v.54.9, <span class="commentaryI">Am</span> 33.4). On the structural necessity for patriliny to make
            sons into spectral likenesses of their fathers, see D. Miller (2000, 2003). Insofar as
            Artegall’s heir corresponds not only to Conan but also to the juncture where Spenser
            splices his fiction into the chronicles, it may be said that the nameless child figures
            the poem’s mirroring function with respect to Elizabeth and the monarchical succession
            she embodies.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656376258" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">29.4–29.7</span>
        29.4-7 The lineal substitution whereby Artegall’s heir ‘shall represent’ his father to
            Britomart is contrasted with the usurpation whereby he recovers his father’s right to
            ‘crowne himself in th’others stead’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656477841" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">30.1–30.2</span>
        30.1-2 The image of the lion rousing itself echoes Jacob’s prophecy for his son Judah:
            ‘as a lions whelpe shalt thou come up from the spoile, my sonne’ (Gen 49:9). It also
            echoes the denunciation of Conan by Gyldas, quoted in Holinshed 5.25: ‘And thou lions
            whelpe, as sayeth the prophet [i.e., Jacob], Aurelius Conanus what doost thou? Art thou
            not swallowed up in the filthie mire of murdering thy kinsmen . . . ?’ (It should be
            mentioned that Gyldas has similar opinions of most British kings.)
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656496273" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">30.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">spred his banner</span>: Cf. <span class="commentaryI">Song Sol</span> 6:3, ‘terrible as an
            armie with banners’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656505749" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">30.3–30.9</span>
        30.3-9 No source is known for Conan’s wars against the Mertians, which appear to be
            Spenser’s invention, substituted for the civil conflicts that characterize Conan’s reign
            in the chronicles. The trace of Conan’s unsavory chronicle character may linger in the
            ‘if’ of line 8, unusual for prophetic utterance: it may simply mean that he will end his
            days in peace <span class="commentaryI">if</span> he can achieve victory, but it seems to say that he will do so
                <span class="commentaryI">if</span> he can be satisfied with victory, i.e. quit while he’s ahead.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656535793" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">30.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">his earthly In</span>: Cf. II.i.59.1-2, ‘death is . . . the commen In
            of rest’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656545335" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">31.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 31 </p>
        <p class="">Spenser continues to diverge from the chronicles in making Vortipore less successful than
            his father, and in giving Vortipore an heir. (Holinshed says Vortipore ‘left no issue
            behind him’, and calls Malgo ‘the nephue of Aurelius Conanus’; 5.26, 27.)</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656574575" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.1</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Behold the man</span>: Echoing John 19:5. See 8.9n on whether there
            is a spectacle for Britomart to ‘behold’. This momentary rhetorical heightening echoes
            the sustained deictic mode of Anchises’ address to Aeneas in the corresponding passage
            from Virgil (<span class="commentaryI">Aen</span> 6.760-886).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656594113" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.3–32.5</span>
        32.3-5 Spenser here ends his divergence from the chronicles, which praise Malgo as
                <span class="commentaryI">pulcherrimus</span> (‘the most handsome of all Britain’s rulers’; Geoffrey,
                <span class="commentaryI">Historia</span> 254), or ‘the comeliest gentleman in beautie and shape of personage
            that was to be found in those daies amongst all the Britains, and therewith of a bold
            and hardie courage’ (Holinshed, <span class="commentaryI">Chronicles</span> 1.585).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656607155" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">32.6</span>
        32.6 Translated directly from Geoffrey: <span class="commentaryI">Hic etiam total insulam optinuit, et sex
                comprovinciales occeanis insulas</span> (‘He too ruled the whole island as well as its
            six neighbors’; 254-55). The ‘islands’ referred to are Ireland, Iceland, Gotland, the
            Orkneys, Norway, and Denmark.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656646551" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 33-34</p>
        <p class="">In the words of Harper, ‘Careticus was not the son of Malgo, and he did not conquer the
            Saxons’ (1910: 151). The account of Gormond’s arrival to help the Saxons drive Careticus
            into Wales, laying waste to churches, towns, and fields along the way, corresponds to
            Geoffrey except in one detail, for Geoffrey refers to ‘Gormundus’ as ‘the king of the
            Africans’ (<span class="commentaryI">Historia</span> 256); Spenser’s reference to his <span class="commentaryI">Norveyses</span> follows
            Holinshed’s conjecture that Geoffrey mistook ‘the Norwegians for Affricanes, bicause
            both those nations were Infidels’ (6.90).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656669735" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">33.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">fell through emptinesse</span>: ‘Deadly because hungry’ (with a pun
            on ‘gourmand’).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656683883" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">34.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">holy Church</span>: Here explicitly Christian, unlike the ambiguous
            edifices mentioned at ii.48.4 and iii.59.3.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656729296" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">34.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">starued den</span>: Transferred epithet.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656738265" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 35 </p>
        <p class="">Here Spenser seems to have adjusted the account in Geoffrey by consulting multiple other
            sources, possibly some in Welsh. For details see Harper (1910: 153-58).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656758316" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Etheldred</span>: Ethelfrith, the first king to unite Bernicia and Deira into what would later
            be known as Northumbria, a medieval English kingdom stretching north from the river
            Humber into what is now southern Scotland.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656766012" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.3</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Augustine</span>: Augustine of Canterbury, designated by Pope Gregory the Great as the first
            Bishop of Canterbury in 598, was sent from Rome to England to convert the Angles to
            Christianity, as well as to reassert Papal authority over the Christian churches that
            had survived in isolation in England after the withdrawal of the Roman legions in
            410.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656775552" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.4</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Dee</span>:<span class="commentaryI"> </span>The river Dee, forming part of the border between Wales and England, lies
            between the city of Chester and the Welsh village of Bangor.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656787344" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.5</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Brockwell</span>: Brocmale, Earl of Chester (on the English side of the river) was either
            defeated by Etheldred or simply fled. Crossing the river, Etheldred then put to death
            the monks in the monastery at Bangor, whose number is variously reported as 200, 1000,
            or 1200.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656802252" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">35.8–35.9</span>
        35.8-9 Cadwan ruled North Wales (Gwynedd); his people are the Britons. After the Britons’
            defeat of Etheldred, they made peace. According to Geoffrey, Cadwan and Etheldred
            (Caduan and Edelfridus) divided the rule of Britain between themselves (260).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656811840" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">36.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 36 </p>
        <p class="">Cadwallin was Cadwan’s son, Edwin the son of Etheldred. Geoffrey explains that the peace
            negotiated by their fathers was broken when Cadwallin refused to permit Edwin to crown
            himself king of Northumbria (262-64). In the hostilities that followed, Edwin prevailed
            at first, aided by a magician (a <span class="commentaryI">sapientissimus auger</span>,<span class="commentaryI"> </span>Pellitus) whose
            warnings gave him a military advantage until he was assassinated (264-70). (The gallows
            are Spenser’s innovation; other passages in which Spenser substitutes hanging for
            another form of execution are I.v.50.5-6 and II.x.32.9; see the discussion in Harper
            1910: 83-84).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656851366" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">37.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 37 </p>
        <p class="">Spenser continues to follow the main lines of Geoffrey’s account but conflates battles
            and alters other details, suggesting that he may have consulted other chronicles,
            including a source now unknown.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656861839" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">37.2–37.3</span>
        37.2-3 Offricke and Osricke are not brothers in Geoffrey, who names <span class="commentaryI">Offridus</span> as
            the son of <span class="commentaryI">Edwinus</span> and <span class="commentaryI">Osrico</span> as his successor, killed subsequently (272).
            Holinshed names two sons of Edwin ‘Osfrid’ and ‘Edfride’, but still reports their deaths
            in separate battles. The phrase ‘twinnes unfortunate’ may suggest an additional source
            through which the ‘sunen tweien’ of Layamon’s version could have reached Spenser (see
            Harper 1910: 161-62).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656873567" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">37.4</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Layburne playne</span>: In Geoffrey, the location is given as ‘the
            plain of Hedfield’; Oswald is killed in a later battle ‘fought at a place named Burne’
            (272).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656886926" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">37.5–37.7</span>
        37.5-7 In Geoffrey the kings of Orkney and Scotland (‘Louthiane’) fall, like Ofridus and
            Oscrico, in separate battles (see 37.2-3n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656913366" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">37.8–37.9</span>
        37.8-9 Geoffrey reports that Peanda was subdued by Caduallo, and became his ally,
                <span class="commentaryI">before</span> the battle with Edwinus (270).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656923079" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">38.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 38 </p>
        <p class="">Cadwallin sends Penda in pursuit of Oswald, next in line as king of Northumbria. Geoffrey
            reports that Oswaldus, under siege at Hevenfield, raised a cross and ordered his
            followers to pray (272). Spenser heightens the account with angels raising crosses on
            high who sponsor a bloodless victory, and makes the name a result of the battle rather
            than, as Geoffrey implies, the inspiration for Oswald’s pious actions.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656955102" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">–39.4</span>
        39.1-4 The battle Geoffrey reports as having taken place at Burne (see 37.4n).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656964738" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">39.5–39.9</span>
        39.5-9 These lines follow Geoffrey’s account of <span class="commentaryI">Oswio</span>, the brother of <span class="commentaryI">Oswaldus
            </span>(272). 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408656996148" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">39.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">like dread</span>: Cf. 37.8, ‘fearefull of like desteny’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657019792" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">39.7–39.8</span>
        39.7-8 Oswin shall ‘tread adowne’ Penda rather than being trodden down by him; the
            chiasmic mirroring of the phrasing on either side of the line break expresses this
            turning of the tables.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657028846" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">40.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 40-41 </p>
        <p class="">In Geoffrey, Cadwalladrus rules for a dozen years before he falls ill, whereupon the
            combination of civil war, famine, and plague destroys the kingdom, forcing him to
            withdraw into Armorica (on the coast of Brittany; cf. II.x.64.5). The account of
            heavenly disfavor and the vision preventing the Britons’ return are based on
            Cadwallader’s lament in departing from England, and on the report that he heard an
            angel’s voice commanding that he give over his intended return: ‘as Cadualadrus was
            preparing a fleet, an angelic voice rang out, ordering him to give up the attempt. God
            did not want the Britons to rule over the island of Britain any longer, until the time
            came which Merlin had foretold to Arthur’ (276, 278).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657076849" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">41.4</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Armoricke</span>: See st. 40-41n.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657087482" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">42.1</span>
        42.1 Echoing Rev 8:13: ‘Wo, wo, wo, to the inhabitants of the earth’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657112537" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">42.7</span>
        42.7 In Geoffrey, Merlin bursts into tears (144).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657123779" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">42.8–42.9</span>
        42.8-9 Geoffrey’s account of British kings covers about 1800 years, starting with Brut
            and the Trojan remnant and ending with the death of <span class="commentaryI">Cadualadrus</span> on 20 April 689
            (280). 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657134254" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">43.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">fashioned</span>: See ii.16.9n on Spenser’s use of this verb to
            describe both <span class="commentaryI">mimesis</span> and <span class="commentaryI">poesis</span>.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657168027" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">the iust reuolution</span>:<span class="commentaryI"> </span>The exact period of the historical
            cycle.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657200181" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.4</span>
        44.4 Cf. Jer 35:7: ‘Nether shal ye buylde house, nor sowe sede, nor plant vineyarde, nor
            have any, but all your daies ye shal dewll in tentes, that ye may live a long time in
            the land where ye be strangers’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657239237" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.5</span>
        44.5 Cf. Acts 7:6: ‘But God spake thus, that his sede shulde be a sojourner in a strange
            land, and that thei shulde kepe it in bondage, and entreate it evil four hundreth
            yeres’. Henry Tudor ascended to the throne in 1485, seven hundred ninety-six years after
            the death of Cadwallader.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657309608" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">44.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">importune</span>: The sense of timing (see 31.5 gloss) is also
            relevant.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657317916" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">45.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 45 </p>
        <p class="">The rulers named in this stanza are Welsh monarchs from the ninth, tenth, and twelfth
            centuries.</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657374060" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">46.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">faithlesse chickens</span>: The raven’s brood (its ‘chicks’) are
            ‘faithless’ because not converted to Christianity.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657403995" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">47.3</span>
	    47.1-3 <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Neustria</span>: Geoffrey’s Latin name for Normandy; the Lion is William the Conqueror,
            who invaded England in 1066.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657430033" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">47.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">the Daniske Tyrants</span>: It was actually Harold Godwinson, Earl of
            Wessex, that William defeated in the Battle of Hastings. Harold had previously defeated
            Harald III of Norway, another claimant to the throne following the death of Edward the
            Confessor; after Harold’s death at Hastings, Edgar Aethling of Wessex was briefly
            proclaimed king before William seized the crown.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657447999" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">47.9</span>
        Upon his deathbead in 1087, William divided his succession among his three sons.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657474543" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.5</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Mona</span>: Welsh name for the Isle of Anglesey, where Henry of Richmond was born. 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657485954" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">in exile</span>: See 44.5n for the ‘strange land’ of Henry’s
            exile.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657507091" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">48.9</span>
        48.9 The Tudors traced their royal line back through the Welsh remnant of the Britons to
            Arthur, and back through the Briton royal line to Brut and the remnant from Troy.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657525850" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">49.1–49.2</span>
        49.1-2 England and Wales were joined in 1536 by the Act of Union. The claim that this
            union is ‘eternall’ echoes the Roman claim to <span class="commentaryI">imperium sine fine</span>, ‘empire without
            end’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657540120" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">49.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">ciuile armes</span>: Cf. ‘civill jarre’ at 23.9. Refers primarily to
            the Wars of the Roses, 1455-87.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657553084" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">49.6–49.9</span>
        49.6-9 The ‘royall Virgin’ Elizabeth I extended her royal scepter across ‘the
                <span class="commentaryI">Belgicke</span> shore’ in defending the Netherlands against Spain (‘the great
            Castle’); Phillip II, as King of Castile, bore a castle on his coat of arms. Cf.
                <span class="commentaryI">DS</span> Howard, ‘those huge castles of Castilian king’, referring to the ships of
            the Armada.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657565176" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">49.7</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">white rod</span>: The phase used by Cooper 1565 to describe Mercury’s
            Caduceus.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657580804" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.1</span>
        50.1 Cf. Matt 24:6, where Christ says to the disciples ‘And ye shal heare of warres, and
            rumors of warres: se that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to passe,
            but the end is not yet’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657593883" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">spirites</span>: Probably singular possessive; if plural, it would
            imply the presence of the ‘spirits’ of the descendants about which he has prophesied.
            See notes to Argument and 8.9.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657620290" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.5</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">halfe extatick stoure</span>: It is characteristic of Spenser’s
            ambivalence toward Merlin that the magician’s ‘fitt’ should be only half-ecstatic,
            ascribed by way of similitude (‘As overcomen’) to very different alternatives.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657632105" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">50.9</span>
        50.9 The submetric ninth line is adjusted in 1609 by the addition of ‘as earst’ following
            ‘looks’.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657644081" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">51.2</span>
        51.2 i.e., ‘everything they needed to ask’
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657665973" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">52.5–52.9</span>
        52.5-9 Uther’s battles against Octa, son of the Saxon Hengist (see II.x.65-66), and ‘his
            relative Eosa’ are detailed in Geoffrey (180-90). <span class="commentaryI">Cayr Verolame</span> (the Roman city
            of Verulamium, later St. Albans, personified in the speaker of <span class="commentaryI">Time</span>) was the
            scene of Uther’s final battle; Octa and Eosa were slain (broken), but Uther was poisoned
            shortly thereafter. The narrative present of the poem is thus located in the brief span
            between his victory and death.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657687460" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">53.2</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">feigned armes</span>: A transferred epithet, although the
            transference is complicated by the absence of a noun to which the adjective might
            properly apply.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657718587" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">53.8–53.9</span>
        53.8-9 At ii.6.1-5, Britomart tells the Redcrosse knight that she had trained in arms
            since infancy.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657735346" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">53.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">make you a mayd Martiall</span>: With a pun on her name
                (<span class="commentaryI">Brito-mart</span> = martial Britoness) as well as on ‘make’ and maid/made.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657763694" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">54.7</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Bunduca</span>: Mentioned in <span class="commentaryI">Briton moniments</span> at II.x.54-56.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657772813" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">54.8</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Guendolen</span>: Mentioned in <span class="commentaryI">Briton moniments</span> II.x.17-20.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657781097" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">54.9</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Martia</span>: <span class="commentaryI">Dame</span> Mertia in <span class="commentaryI">Briton moniments</span> at II.x.42.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657789417" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">54.9</span>
	    <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Emmilen</span>: Perhaps Emiline, mentioned at VI.ii.29.2 as queen of Cornwall.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657815783" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">55.1</span>
        <p class="">St. 55-56 </p>
        <p class="">Spenser elaborates freely on hints from various chronicle sources (see Harper
            1910:165-68). Uther fought the Saxons at Menevia (St. David’s, in south-central Wales)
            following the assassination of his brother Aurelius, and was crowned after the battle
            (Geoffrey, <span class="commentaryI">Historia</span> 180). The Saxon queen Angela, mentioned by chroniclers as one
            possible source for the etymology of the name ‘Angles’/England, is a virgin only in
            Spenser’s account. Spenser has invented her combat with Ulfin (the knight who
            accompanies Uther on his nocturnal visit to Igerna) and Carados (a name that appears in
            Geoffrey and Malory, but not as one of Uther’s knights).</p>
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657879301" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">58.9</span>
        58.9 Echoing the descriptions of Artegall’s armor (ii.25.4) and the skirt of Praysdesire
            (II.ix.37.1-2).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657890760" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">59.3</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">Church</span>: For the ambiguity of this designation, see the notes
            to ii.48.4 and iii.34.2.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657917914" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">59.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">bauldrick</span>: An ornamented belt or girdle like those worne by
            Arthur (I.vii.29.8) and Belphoebe (II.iii.29.5).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657930181" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">60.1–60.2</span>
        60.1-2 The spear is first introduced at i.7.9. For Bladud’s reign and his ‘wondrous
            faculty’, see II.x.25-26. Joining a British spear with Saxon armor, Britomart
            foreshadows in her own equipage the union of kingdoms foretold by Merlin (st. 49).
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657966829" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">61.6</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">clombe</span>: An archaic form, imitated from Chaucer or Lydgate.
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408657975059" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">62.2</span>
        62.2 Merlin also directed Arthur to Faeryland (I.ix.7.1-2). 
    </div><div id="commentaryEntryfq1590_bk3_1408658004338" class="commentaryEntry commentary" xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><span class="commentary_line_numbers">62.9</span>
        <span class="commentaryEmphasis">forth rode</span>: Emphasizing Britomart’s purposeful action (cf.
            61.9).
    </div>